Tuesday, 17 May 2016

Italy Gets Smugglers of Looted Archaeological Material

Italian police on Friday smashed a criminal gang suspected of stealing archaeological artefacts from Sicily and smuggling them to Germany for sale on the black market.
Police arrested two alleged gang members and seized hundreds of looted treasures from the ancient Greek and Roman eras during the operation.
Police arrested the gang's alleged ringleader, a 56-year-old man from the Sicilian town of Siracusa, and a second man from Siracusa, while a third suspect was ordered not to leave his home town of Paterno, police said.
The "well-organised" gang used couriers to smuggle the archaeological treasures to Germany and sell it on the international underground market in ways that are being probed, according to investigators.
Police said they were working with authorities outside Italy in efforts to repatriate the stolen artefacts to Italy.
A total of 22 other people are being probed in connection with the alleged gang, investigators said.
Police investigations began in 2014 when illegal digs were discovered at the ruins of the ancient Greek town of Himera, near Palermo.
The looters allegedly operated in at least five other archaeological sites in Sicily - near Corleone and Petralia Sottana in the province of Palermo, Augusta in the province of Siracusa, at Cattolica Eraclea in the province of Agrigento and Mussomeli in the province of Catania.

Of course the moent they reach a German dealer, any business correspondence is destroyed and the whole lot is presented to collectors and other dealers as being from "an old collection - whoops I seem to have lost the paperwork, but trust me". In fact you really cannot trust any of them without seeing the paperwork.

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About Me

British archaeologist living and working in Warsaw, Poland. Since the early 1990s (or even longer) a primary interest has been research on artefact hunting and collecting and the market in portable antiquities in the international context and their effect on the archaeological record.

Abbreviations used in this blog

"coiney" - a term I use for private collector of dug up ancient coins, particularly a member of the Moneta-L forum or the ACCG

"heap-of-artefacts-on-a-table-collecting" the term rather speaks for itself, an accumulation of loose artefacts with no attempt to link each item with documented origins. Most often used to refer to metal detectorists (ice-cream tubs-full) and ancient coin collectors (Roman coins sold in aggregated bulk lots)